* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Bacterial response to environment
Cell culture wikipedia , lookup
Cellular differentiation wikipedia , lookup
Tissue engineering wikipedia , lookup
Extracellular matrix wikipedia , lookup
Organ-on-a-chip wikipedia , lookup
Type three secretion system wikipedia , lookup
Cell encapsulation wikipedia , lookup
Endomembrane system wikipedia , lookup
Signal transduction wikipedia , lookup
Bacterial response to environment • Rapid response crucial for survival – Simultaneous transcription and translation – Coordinate regulation in operons and regulons – Global genetic control through modulons • Bacteria respond – – – – – Change from aerobic to anaerobic Presence/absence of glucose Amount of nutrients in general Presence of specific nutrients Population size 1 Quorum Sensing • Bacteria monitor their own population size – Pathogenesis: do not produce important molecules too soon to tip off the immune system. – Light production: a few bacteria make feeble glow, but ATP cost per cell remains high. – Bacteria form spores when in high numbers, avoid competition between each other. • System requirements – A signaling molecule that increases in concentration as the population increases; LMW – A receptor; activation of a set of genes 2 Chemotaxis and other taxes • Movement in response to environmental stimulus – – – – – Positive chemotaxis, attraction towards nutrients Negative: away from harmful chemicals Aerotaxis: motility in response to oxygen Phototaxis: motility to certain wavelengths of light Magnetotaxis: response to magnetic fields • Taxis is movement – Includes swimming through liquid using flagella – Swarming over surfaces with flagella – Gliding motility, requiring a surface to move over 3 Flagellar structures www.scu.edu/SCU/Departments/ BIOL/Flagella.jpg img.sparknotes.com/.../monera/ gifs/flagella.gif 4 Runs and Tumbles: bacteria find their way http://www.bgu.ac.il/~aflaloc/bioca/motil1.gif 5 Motility summarized • Flagella: protein appendages for swimming through liquid or across wet surfaces. • Axial filament: a bundle of internal flagella – Between cell membrane and outer membrane in spirochetes – Filament rotates, bacterium corkscrews through medium • Gliding – No visible structures, requires solid surface – Slime usually involved. 6 Axial filaments 7 http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://microvet.arizona.edu/Courses/MIC420/lecture_notes/spirochetes/gifs/spirochete_crossection.gif& imgrefurl=http://microvet.arizona.edu/Courses/MIC420/lecture_notes/spirochetes/spirochete_cr.html&h=302&w=400&sz=49&tbnid=BOVdHqe pF7UJ:&tbnh=90&tbnw=119&start=1&prev=/images%3Fq%3Daxial%2Bfilament%2Bbacteria%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26sa%3DG Gliding Motility Movement on a solid surface. Cells produce, move in slime trails. Cells glide in groups, singly, and can reverse directions. Unrelated organism glide: myxobacteria, flavobacteria, cyanobacteria; Recent data support polysaccharide synthesis, extrusion model. http://cmgm.stanford.edu/devbio/kaiserlab/about_myxo/about_myx ococcus.html 8 Starvation Responses 9 • Bacteria frequently on verge of starvation – Rapid utilization of nutrients by community keeps nutrient supply low – Normal life typical of stationary phase – Bacteria monitor nutritional status and adjust through global genetic mechanisms • Types of responses – – – – Lower metabolic rates, smaller size (incr surface:volume) Release of extracellular enzymes, scavenging molecules Production of resting cells, spores Induction of low Km uptake systems Extracellular molecules 10 • Enzymes – Polymers cannot enter cells – Proteins, starch, cellulose all valuable nutrients – Enzymes produced and released from the cell – LMW products taken up; nutrients gathered exceed energy costs. • Low molecular weight aids – Siderophores, hemolysins collect iron – Antibiotics may slow the growth of competition when nutrients are in short supply Sporulation 11 • Resting cells – Cells respond to low nutrients by sporulation or slowing down metabolic rate, decr size. – Some cells change shape, develop thick coat – Endospores form within cells; very resistant. – Spores in bacteria generally are for survival • Not reproduction – A spore structure protects cells against drying, heat, etc. until better nutrient conditions return • An inactive cell can’t protect itself well Endospore formation Genetic cascade producing alternative sigma factors. http://www.microbe.org/art/endospore_cycle.jpg 12 Responses of microbes to other environmental stresses 13 • Compatible solutes: small neutral molecules accumulated in cytoplasm when external environment is hypertonic. • Heat shock proteins and other stress proteins – Bacteria express additional genes that code for protective proteins. http://www.thermera.com/ima ges/Betaine.gif